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13 April 2021 Birds respond to woodland type, soil and mesic gradients in heterogeneous woodlands at Dryandra
Graham R. Fulton, John Lawson
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Abstract

The vast clearance of forest and woodland for agriculture with the removal of more than 93% of the native vegetation has decimated the fauna of what is now known as the Western Australian wheatbelt. This clearing has been particularly severe on wandoo woodlands through the wheatbelt. In order to quantify the usefulness of what has been left, three native woodland types were surveyed for avian abundance and diversity, in a large heterogeneous remnant of old-growth woodland, at Dryandra. Birds were counted at 70 points along seven transects, through three woodland types: powderbark wandoo (Eucalyptus accedens), wandoo (E. wandoo) and a brown mallet (E. astringens) plantation. Greater abundance and species richness were detected in E. wandoo woodland, although this is thought to be related to the more mesic and productive low-lying contours of the landscape on which it is situated.

Journal Compilation © CSIRO 2020
Graham R. Fulton and John Lawson "Birds respond to woodland type, soil and mesic gradients in heterogeneous woodlands at Dryandra," Australian Journal of Zoology 68(2), 55-61, (13 April 2021). https://doi.org/10.1071/ZO20095
Received: 25 November 2020; Accepted: 22 March 2021; Published: 13 April 2021
KEYWORDS
adaptive management
biodiversity
disturbance
ecology
forest
fragmentation
homogenisation
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